88 DIRECTORY OF AMERICAN MUSEUMS 



iooo, fresh-water, 350 (local); Insects, 250; Other invertebrates, 75; 

 Fishes, 200; Other vertebrates, 25. 



KANSAS STATE NORMAL SCHOOL. Museum. 



Staff. The museum is in charge of W. H. Keller, curator, under 

 the supervision of L. C. Wooster, head of the department of biology 

 and geology. 



Anthropology. About 300 specimens including Indian relics, 

 Philippine material, etc. 



Art. The museum has no art collection but the art department 

 of the school has a collection of casts and copies of great works of art, 

 and a series of lantern slides for classroom instruction. 



Botany. Good collections for teaching purposes. 



Geology. Minerals, 500; Rocks, 500. This collection includes 

 a good series of stalactites. 



Paleontology. Invertebrates, 1000; Vertebrates, 50; Plants, 50. 



Zoology. Shells, 400; Insects, 1000; Other invertebrates, 200; 

 Fishes, 25; Batrachians, 10; Reptiles, 50; Birds, 450; Mammals, 100; 

 Bird eggs, 800. 



Historical Sketch. The museum is largely the result of the 

 work of D. S. Kelly, who was head of the natural history department 

 from 1885 to 1897. 



Financial Support. An annual appropriation of $200 from the 

 school. 



Building. The museum occupies 5200 square feet of floor space 

 for exhibition, and 900 for offices, workrooms, etc. in the science 

 building, erected in 1905 at a cost of $50,000. 



Scope and Attendance. Maintained primarily for teaching 

 purposes, but also open to the public on week-days from 7.30 to 6. 



LAWRENCE: 



UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. Museums. 



Staff. Director, Frank Strong; Curators, Lewis L. Dyche (verte- 

 brate zoology), Clarence E. McClung (vertebrate paleontology), 

 Samuel J. Hunter (entomology), Erasmus Haworth (geology and min- 

 eralogy), William C. Stevens (herbarium), Alexander M. Wilcox 

 (classical museum); Assistant curators, Handel T. Martin (paleon- 

 tology), Charles D. Bunker (vertebrate zoology), Francis X. Williams 

 (entomology). 



Anthropology. A few hundred specimens on exhibition. 



Botany. A herbarium of about 10,000 species, representative 



